TYNDALE TERRACE LIMITED
Tyndale Terrace Limited, a Maldon construction company incorporated on 30 Jun 2014, entered compulsory liquidation under Insolvency Act 1986, s.122, with the court appointing the process and The Gazette recording Notice 5143274. The public record shows full accounts filed to 26 Sep 2025, a filed confirmation statement, and a borrowing structure that included 8 registered charges, with the charge holder shown as Solar Bridging Limited and the status marked fully-satisfied.
What the data was telling us
Readings from The Gazette and Companies House, in the firm's final two years.
Lessons behind the liquidation
The company did not enter an informal arrangement, it moved into compulsory liquidation under Insolvency Act 1986, s.122. That means the court, rather than the directors, set the insolvency process in train, which is a material shift in control for any business.
The record shows full accounts filed to 26 Sep 2025 and a filed confirmation statement, so the statutory paperwork remained in place. Even so, the company still reached liquidation, which underlines that timely filings are only one part of financial resilience.
The register shows 8 registered charges, with Solar Bridging Limited named as holder and the status marked fully-satisfied. For construction businesses, that kind of secured borrowing profile can be a reminder to watch how working capital, project timing, and creditor positions interact over time.
This looks like a construction-sector insolvency pattern where a long-established company with stable directorship and regular filings still ends up in court-led liquidation after a period of secured borrowing and pressure on the balance sheet.
Every charge, every filing, every appointment, in one dossier.
Director histories across related entities, the full debenture instrument, creditor estimates, and the practitioner's record on comparable cases for TYNDALE TERRACE LIMITED.
